Indigenous peoples' rights in Australia, Canada & New Zealand / Indigenous peoples' rights in Australia, Canada and New Zealand edited by Paul Havemann. - xvi, 520 pages ; 23 cm

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Chronology 1 : Euro-American law of nationals and indigenous peoples - Chronology 2 : Twentieth-century public international law and indigenous peoples - Chronology 3 : Indigenous rights in the political jurisprudence of Australia, Canada and New Zealand : parallel chronologies / INDIGENOUS PEOPLES' PERSPECTIVES : SOVEREIGNTY, SELF-DETERMINATION AND CO-EISTENCE / Estate of the mind : the growing cooperation between indigenous and mainstream managers of northern Australian landscapes and the challenge for educators and researchers / Aboriginal peoples in Canada : aspirations for distributive justice as distinct peoples / Māori sovereignty, colonial and post-colonial discourses / SETTLING THE ANGLO-COMMONWEALTH / New frontiers : Australia / The 'gentle' occupation : the settlement of Canada and the dispossession of the First Nation / The settlement of New Zealand from 1835 / POLITICISING AND INTERNATIONALISING INDIGENOUS PEOPLES' RIGHTS CLAIMS / Politicising indigeneity : ethno-politics in white settler dominons / International human rights and their impact on domestic law on indigenous peoples' rights in Australia, Canada and New Zealand / COLONISATION, CRIMINALISATION AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLES' RIGHTS / Australia : The Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody / Canadian commissions of inquiry into Aboriginal peoples and criminal justice / Assimilation, equality and sovereignty in New Zealand-Aotearoa / ADMINISTERING INDIGENOUS AFFAIRS : CITIZENSHIP AND SELF-DETERMINATION / Living together but not neighbours : cultural imperialism in Australia / Canada : 'indian administration' from the Royal Proclamation of 1763 to constitutionally entrenched aboriginal rights / Tino rangatiratanga : Māori in the political and administrative system / CONSTITUTIONALISING INDIGENOUS RIGHTS ? / Native title in Australia : denial, recognition and dispossession / From Calder to Van der Peet : aboriginal rights and Canadian law, 1973-96 / From sovereignty talk to settlement time : the constitutional setting of Māori claims in the 1990s / Indigenous peoples, the state and the challenge of differentiated citizenship : a formative conclusion / Paul Havemann -- Paul Havemann -- Marcia Langston - an interview with Paul Chartrand - Ranginui J. Walker -- Paul Havemann -- Henry Reynolds - Ken Coats - M.P.K. Sorrenson -- Paul Havemann -- Augie Fleras - Catherine J. Iorns Magallanes -- Paul Havemann -- David McDonald - Scott Clark and John J. Cover - John Pratt -- Paul Havemann -- Christine Fletcher - Hamar Foster - Alan Ward and Janine Hayward -- Paul Havemann -- Richard H. Bartlett - Michael Asch - P.S. McHugh - Paul Havemann. PT. I: 1 2 3 PT. II: 4 5 6 PT. III: 7 8 PT.IV: 9 10 11 PT.V: 12 13 14 PT.VI: 15 16 17 18

0195583353 9780195583359 0195584074 9780195584073


Māori (New Zealand people)--Government relations.
Māori (New Zealand people)--Legal status, laws, etc.
Aboriginal Australians--Government relations
Aboriginal Australians--Civil rights
Aboriginal Australians--Legal status, laws, etc.
Indians of North America--Government relations--Canada
Indians of North America--Civil rights--Canada
Indians of North America--Legal status, laws, etc.--Canada

323.11